The United States Conference of Mayors (USCM) is the official non-partisan organization of cities with populations of 30,000 or more. The cities are each represented by their mayors or other chief elected officials. The organization was founded in light of the Great Depression and was formed under Herbert Hoover until its original charter was signed at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C., on the eve of the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The organization is part of the "Big Seven", a group of organizations that represent local and state governments in the United States.

Mission

Barack Obama in a U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting in the East Room of the White House, January 21, 2010

The organization serves the following functions: Help develop and promote effective national urban/suburban policy; build stronger and more effective federal-city relationships; monitor the effectiveness of federal policy in terms of its service to urban needs; help mayors develop leadership and management tools; and to create a forum in which mayors can share ideas and information. By representing all large municipalities and their leaders in these ways, the conference is speaking for vast majority of the components of the nation's economy. According to one of the conference's own reports, metropolitan areas accounted for 84 percent of the nation's gross domestic product and at the same time generated 84 percent of the nation's employment opportunities.

History

Frank Murphy, founder and first president of the USCM
Current USCM President David Holt

In 1932, Mayor of Detroit Frank Murphy called a conference of mayors to meet in Detroit, Michigan, in June. In the shadow of the depression, he felt it was worthwhile to pursue federal aid for cities. Forty-eight mayors of cities in excess of 100,000 attended. On June 3, two days after the Adjournment sine die of the first conference, Murphy appointed a seven-person commission (including himself) to lobby Washington using the powers vested in him by the conference. Murphy along with Mayor of Boston James Michael Curley, Mayor of Cleveland Ray T. Miller, Mayor of Milwaukee Daniel Hoan, Mayor of New Orleans T. Semmes Walmsley, Mayor of Minneapolis William A. Anderson, and Mayor of Grand Rapids George W. Welsh traveled to Washington, D.C., to lobby the federal government for aid. The mayors that went with him urgently pleaded for relief. On June 6 at 10:00 a.m., they met with United States Speaker of the House John Nance Garner (D), Majority Leader of the United States House of Representatives Henry T. Rainey (D) and Minority Leader of the United States House of Representatives Bertrand H. Snell (R). They held out hope for a $5 billion prosperity loan, but made it clear their true need for any relief for the despair of their constituents. At 11:00 a.m., they met with United States vice president/President of the United States Senate Charles Curtis and other Senate leaders. The presence of the Mayors was unprecedented and despite some Democratic defections, a band of 12 Republicans led by Fiorello LaGuardia enabled the passage of a relief bill by a 205–189 margin. Unfortunately for the mayors, President Herbert Hoover was not receptive to the $1.9 billion scale of the public works plan. However, the mayors were able to convince the President that federal support for local relief efforts was reasonable and this is considered a watershed event. 42 of the 48 states benefited from the newly empowered Reconstruction Finance Corporation. After the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932 was signed into law by Hoover, the conference wrote its charter at the Mayflower Hotel on the eve of the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt. It held its second meeting in 1933 and formed the permanent United States Conference of Mayors with Murphy as its president.

In 1972, USCM president and Mayor of Milwaukee Henry Maier led the crusade for municipal resources at a time when federal grants to state and local governments was escalating rapidly. Richard Nixon started allowing cities to participate in federal revenue sharing. This source of municipal funding relieved cities until the mid-1980s. Jimmy Carter capped revenue payments and Reagan discontinued everything except for CDBGs. The CDBG program has consistently allocated over $4 billion/year to state and local jurisdictions. Currently, CDBG's are being used by 1180 local governments and states. Using provisions in the 1995 Crime Bill, President Bill Clinton paid for municipal enforcement authorities on behalf of cities.

Current issues

During the presidential transition of Barack Obama in December 2008, the conference held a news conference along with United States House Committee on Ways and Means chairman Charlie Rangel, United States House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee chairman James Oberstar and Congressional Urban Caucus chairman Chaka Fattah. Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced that the meeting sought support of the conferences survey of 11,391 "ready-to-go" infrastructure projects that they hoped to see in a Main Street recovery plan during Obama's first 100 days. According to New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, the $73.1 billion projects had completed the design and approval process and met all political requirement except for the need for funding. At the same time the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials called for support for more 5,148 road and bridge infrastructure projects that they categorized as "ready-to-go." Many of the ideas in the mayor proposal became part of the stimulus package.

Another issue that the conference took issue with in 2008 include the misappropriation of federal funds for municipal anti-terrorism emergency equipment through the Homeland Security Department, which was created in 2003, instead of for municipal police forces and other enforcement officials. On this issue, they stood by the International Association of Chiefs of Police who feel common domestic anti-crime expenditure might better serve the public interest. Since the September 11 attacks federally funded municipal purchases of bomb robots, chem-bio suits and other anti-terrorism equipment have often gone unused while crime is underserved. These organizations are calling for a re-evaluation of the federal grant system. Along with various foreign governments, United States Chamber of Commerce and the Travel Industry Association, the conference also stood against the 2008 Homeland Security Department initiative to fingerprint foreign visitors before they leave the country by airplane. These complaints came a few years after the conference complained that their cities were not receiving an equitable proportion of counterterrorism funding in the first few years after the attacks.

The conference has been active in fighting foreclosures and predatory lending. During the formulation and debate of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 in response to the 2008 financial crisis, a conference spokesperson was cited for being in support of the inclusion of $4 billion for the purchase, rehabilitation and resale of low- and moderate-income family distressed property. The money would produce profits that would be used to develop neighborhoods. Another important feature to municipalities was $180 million devoted to grants for pre-foreclosure and legal counseling.

Also in 2008, the conference unanimously both supported single-payer national health insurance and City-coordinated drug overdose prevention efforts. After calling for a study on bottled water in 2007, in 2008, the conference came out against bottled water which consumes 1.5 million barrels of oil per year to produce its plastic bottles.

In 2009, the conference adopted a sweeping proposal for lesbian and gay equality by mayors Christopher Cabaldon, Sam Adams, and David Cicilline, making it the first national organization of American elected officials to call for marriage equality, passage of ENDA, and the repeal of Don't ask, don't tell.

In 2013, the conference adopted a resolution urging the federal government to give states leeway in establishing marijuana policies. "Voters in states and cities that wish to break the stranglehold of organized crime over the distribution and sale of marijuana in their communities by legalizing, regulating and taxing marijuana should have the option of doing so," stated Mayor Stephen H. Cassidy of San Leandro, California.

In 2020, in part of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the conference requested $250 billion in federal spending directly to cities to counteract the 88% shortfall in city revenues across the country.

Activities

The organization convenes for its winter meeting each January in Washington, D.C., and an Annual Meeting each June in a different U.S. city in addition to ad hoc meetings. At the annual meeting, members vote on policy resolutions. The results are distributed to the president of the United States and the United States Congress.

On January 11, 2007, the conference leadership approved the annual ten-point platform called "Strong Cities, Strong Families for a Strong America", including positions on energy policy and homeland security, and support for Community development block grants (CDBG), government sponsored enterprises, the State Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIPS), and the Workforce Investment Act. In 2008, travel and tourism were part of the plan for the first time.

In the past, the conference has taken stances against Ronald Reagan's 1983 budget. It has also through its president Fiorello La Guardia, spoken against cuts in the Works Progress Administration on behalf of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The conference has actively pursued legislation to curb handgun violence by changing the regulations for purchasing, adding regulatory oversight, and suing manufacturers for unreasonable marketing practices and lax safety standards.

At times, the unified voice of mayors has had significant impact on federal policies. An example was the controversy over the decision by investigators from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Department of Justice to carry out an examination of waste, fraud and abuse in the housing programs in three cities led by black mayors (Kurt L. Schmoke, Marc H. Morial and Willie L. Brown Jr.). Eventually, the housing subcommittee of the United States House Committee on Appropriations Chairman, Jerry Lewis, in response into the collective voice of the mayors, with the support of President Bill Clinton and Andrew M. Cuomo, the United States secretary of housing and urban development, mandated a clarification of selection criteria for investigation subjects.

In determining their positions and policies, the conference has had to balance difficult political choices. They once opposed the Environmental Protection Agency in a resolution which came out against enforcing stricter smog and soot limits. The conference members felt that the stricter standards for ozone and fine particles would have hampered the economies of many municipalities, especially those that are steel-, automobile- and fossil fuel-intensive.

Locales of annual meetings

YearCityStateNumber
1963HonoluluHawai'i
1967HonoluluHawai'i
1972New OrleansLouisiana40th
1980SeattleWashington48th
1981LouisvilleKentucky49th
1982MinneapolisMinnesota50th
1983DenverColorado51st
1984PhiladelphiaPennsylvania52nd
1985AnchorageAlaska53rd
1986San JuanPuerto Rico54th
1987NashvilleTennessee55th
1988Salt Lake CityUtah56th
1989CharlestonSouth Carolina57th
1990ChicagoIllinois58th
1991San DiegoCalifornia59th
1992HoustonTexas60th
1993New YorkNew York61st
1994PortlandOregon62nd
1995MiamiFlorida63rd
1996ClevelandOhio64th
1997San FranciscoCalifornia65th
1998RenoNevada66th
1999New OrleansLouisiana67th
2000SeattleWashington68th
2001DetroitMichigan69th
2002MadisonWisconsin70th
2003DenverColorado71st
2004BostonMassachusetts72nd
2005ChicagoIllinois73rd
2006Las VegasNevada74th
2007Los AngelesCalifornia75th
2008MiamiFlorida76th
2009ProvidenceRhode Island77th
2010Oklahoma CityOklahoma78th
2011BaltimoreMaryland79th
2012OrlandoFlorida80th
2013Las VegasNevada81st
2014DallasTexas82nd
2015San FranciscoCalifornia83rd
2016IndianapolisIndiana84th
2017Miami BeachFlorida85th
2018BostonMassachusetts86th
2019HonoluluHawaii87th
2020Virtual88th
2021Virtual89th
2022RenoNevada90th
2023ColumbusOhio91st
2024Kansas CityMissouri92nd
2025TampaFlorida93rd
2026Long BeachCalifornia94th
2027ProvidenceRhode Island95th

Annual awards and grants

The U.S. Conference of Mayors also houses the Mayors Climate Protection Center, created in 2007 to support mayors in their efforts to reduce the effects of climate change on American cities. In June 2007, the center awarded its first annual "Mayors' Climate Protection Awards" to leading mayors. The "U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement", initiated by Seattle mayor Greg Nickels in 2005, seeks the pledges of mayors from all 50 states to take action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 7% from 1990 levels by the year 2012, in line with the Kyoto Protocol. As of February 2010, 1017 mayors have signed the Agreement. In 2007, the mayors called for a multibillion-dollar grant to help cities fight global warming and declared global warming as first on their list of top-ten priorities. That year the conference and the city of Seattle hosted the "2007 Mayors Climate Protection Summit in Seattle", which featured Bill Clinton and Al Gore. Wal-Mart has been a corporate partner in the presentation of the first two years of these awards.

The conference has granted City Livability Awards since 1979 for mayors and governments as recognition for developing programs that enhance the quality of life in urban areas. Programs such as drowning awareness and prevention programs earn such recognitions.

Since 1997, the Conference of Mayors in conjunction with the Americans for the Arts has annually presented Public Leadership in the Arts Awards. The awards recognize "elected officials and artists or arts organizations that have demonstrated outstanding leadership in the advancement of the arts." Various classes of elected officials are recognized and various types of contributions are recognized each year.

The conference has advocated for HIV/AIDS Prevention Grants Programs. Annually, in cooperation with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) it awards approximately hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants for HIV/AIDS prevention service to Native Americans as well as to African American or Hispanic Women at High Risk of HIV Infection. This was part of a broader 24-year partnership with the CDC in which the conference has awarded $23 million in grants to community-based organizations and local health departments to promote local prevention and education efforts.

Organization

Task forces

Temporary task forces are organized to study emerging issues and make recommendations to the body of the conference. Prior task forces have addressed AIDS, hunger and homelessness, unfunded federal mandates, youth crime and violence, high fuel costs, and brownfields.

Standing committees

The organization's members serve on the conference's standing committee which recommend policies for the general body to evaluate for endorsement at the summer meetings. The endorsed policies are delivered to the United States president and United States Congress. The conference supports initiatives such as handgun regulation, recycling, defense funding and global warming. Although the organization is domestic, its reach is international. It partakes in missions to worldwide locations. When the internet blossomed and President Bill Clinton made plans for an unregulated and untaxed electronic marketplace, state and local officials objected. Their voice was represented by the conference. Mayors may also serve on one or more of the conference's standing committees: Children, Health, and Human Services; Community Development and Housing; Criminal and Social Justice; Energy; Environment; International Affairs; Jobs, Education and the Workforce; Metro Economies; Technology and Innovation; Tourism, Arts, Parks, Entertainment and Sports; and Transportation.

Presidents

The president, vice president, and second vice president are chosen by a vote among delegates at the annual meeting. Mayors who wish to run for any of the positions must write a formal letter to the Nominating Committee, who will submit a report to be voted on at the annual meeting. Typically, at least one of the three mayors must be a member of the minority party.

List of presidents

The following is a comprehensive listing of presidents of the United States Conference of Mayors:

# (order)YearsPresidentCityStateParty
1st1932–33Frank MurphyDetroitMichiganDemocratic
2nd1933James Michael CurleyBostonMassachusetts
3rd1933–34T. Semmes WalmsleyNew OrleansLouisiana
4th1934–35Daniel HoanMilwaukeeWisconsinSocialist
5th1935–45Fiorello La GuardiaNew York CityNew YorkRepublican
6th1945–47Edward Joseph KellyChicagoIllinoisDemocratic
7th1947–49George W. WelshGrand RapidsMichiganRepublican
8th1949–50Cooper GreenBirminghamAlabamaDemocratic
9th1950–52David L. LawrencePittsburghPennsylvania
10th1952–53Martin H. KennellyChicagoIllinois
11th1953Thomas A. BurkeClevelandOhio
12th1953–55Elmer RobinsonSan FranciscoCaliforniaRepublican
13th1955–57John HynesBostonMassachusettsDemocratic
14th1957–58Robert F. Wagner Jr.New York CityNew York
15th1958–59Norris PoulsonLos AngelesCaliforniaRepublican
16th1959–60Richard J. DaleyChicagoIllinoisDemocratic
17th1960–61Richardson DilworthPhiladelphiaPennsylvania
18th1961–62W. Haydon BurnsJacksonvilleFlorida
19th1962Anthony J. CelebrezzeClevelandOhio
20th1962–63Richard C. LeeNew HavenConnecticut
21st1963Arthur L. SellandFresnoCaliforniaRepublican
22nd1963–65Raymond TuckerSt. LouisMissouriDemocratic
23rd1965–66Neal BlaisdellHonoluluHawaiiRepublican
24th1966–67Jerome CavanaghDetroitMichiganDemocratic
25th1967–68Joseph M. BarrPittsburghPennsylvania
26th1968–69Terry SchrunkPortlandOregon
27th1969–70Jack D. MaltesterSan LeandroCalifornia
28th1970–71James TatePhiladelphiaPennsylvania
29th1971–72Henry MaierMilwaukeeWisconsin
30th1972–73Louie WelchHoustonTexasRepublican
31st1973–74Roy MartinNorfolkVirginiaDemocratic
32nd1974–75Joseph AliotoSan FranciscoCalifornia
33rd1975–76Moon LandrieuNew OrleansLouisiana
34th1976–77Kenneth A. GibsonNewarkNew Jersey
35th1977–78Lee AlexanderSyracuseNew York
36th1978–79William H. McNichols Jr.DenverColorado
37th1979–80Dick CarverPeoriaIllinoisRepublican
38th1980–81Richard G. HatcherGaryIndianaDemocratic
39th1981–82Helen BoosalisLincolnNebraska
40th1982–83Coleman YoungDetroitMichigan
41st1983–84Richard FultonNashvilleTennessee
42nd1984–85Hernán PadillaSan JuanPuerto RicoRepublican
43rd1985–86Dutch MorialNew OrleansLouisianaDemocratic
44th1986–87Joseph P. Riley Jr.CharlestonSouth Carolina
45th1987–88Richard L. BerkleyKansas CityMissouriRepublican
46th1988–89Arthur John HollandTrentonNew JerseyDemocratic
47th1989–90Kathy WhitmireHoustonTexas
48th1990–91Bob IsaacColorado SpringsColoradoRepublican
49th1991–92Raymond FlynnBostonMassachusettsDemocratic
50th1992–93William AlthausYorkPennsylvaniaRepublican
51st1993–94Jerry AbramsonLouisvilleKentuckyDemocratic
52nd1994–95Victor AsheKnoxvilleTennesseeRepublican
53rd1995–96Norm RiceSeattleWashingtonDemocratic
54th1996–97Richard M. DaleyChicagoIllinois
55th1997–98Paul HelmkeFort WayneIndianaRepublican
56th1998–99Deedee CorradiniSalt Lake CityUtahDemocratic
57th1999–2000Wellington WebbDenverColorado
58th2000–01H. Brent ColesBoiseIdahoRepublican
59th2001–02Marc MorialNew OrleansLouisianaDemocratic
60th2002–03Thomas MeninoBostonMassachusetts
61st2003–04James GarnerHempsteadNew YorkRepublican
62nd2004–05Don PlusquellicAkronOhioDemocratic
63rd2005–06Beverly O'NeillLong BeachCalifornia
64th2006Michael GuidoDearbornMichiganRepublican
65th2006–08Douglas PalmerTrentonNew JerseyDemocratic
66th2008–09Manny DiazMiamiFlorida
67th2009Greg NickelsSeattleWashington
68th2009–11Elizabeth KautzBurnsvilleMinnesotaRepublican
69th2011–12Antonio VillaraigosaLos AngelesCaliforniaDemocratic
70th2012–13Michael NutterPhiladelphiaPennsylvania
71st2013–14Scott SmithMesaArizonaRepublican
72nd2014–15Kevin JohnsonSacramentoCaliforniaDemocratic
73rd2015–16Stephanie Rawlings-BlakeBaltimoreMaryland
74th2016–17Mick CornettOklahoma CityOklahomaRepublican
75th2017–18Mitch LandrieuNew OrleansLouisianaDemocratic
76th2018–19Stephen K. BenjaminColumbiaSouth Carolina
77th2019–20Bryan BarnettRochester HillsMichiganRepublican
78th2020–21Greg FischerLouisvilleKentuckyDemocratic
79th2021–22Nan WhaleyDaytonOhio
80th2022–23Francis SuarezMiamiFloridaRepublican
81st2023–24Hillary SchieveRenoNevadaIndependent
82nd2024–25Andrew GintherColumbusOhioDemocratic
83rd2025-presentDavid HoltOklahoma CityOklahomaRepublican

Cities that have had multiple mayors serve as president

# of pres.CityMayors who served as president
5New OrleansT. Semmes Walmsley (1933–34); Moon Landrieu (1975–76); Dutch Morial (1985–86); Marc Morial (2001–02); Mitch Landrieu (2017–18)
4BostonJames Michael Curley (1933); John Hynes (1955–57); Raymond Flynn (1991–92); Thomas Menino (2002–03)
ChicagoEdward Joseph Kelly (1945–47); Martin H. Kennelly (1952–53); Richard J. Daley (1959–60); Richard M. Daley (1996–97)
3DetroitFrank Murphy (1932–33); Jerome Cavanagh (1966–67); Coleman Young (1982–83)
PhiladelphiaRichardson Dilworth (1960–61); James Tate (1970–71); Michael Nutter (2012–13)
2ClevelandThomas A. Burke (1952); Anthony J. Celebrezze (1962)
DenverWilliam H. McNichols Jr. (1978–79); Wellington Webb (1999–2000)
HoustonLouie Welch (1972–73); Kathy Whitmire (1989–90)
Los AngelesNorris Poulson (1958–59); Antonio Villaraigosa (2011–12)
LouisvilleJerry Abramson (1993–94); Greg Fischer (2020–21)
MiamiManny Diaz (2008–09); Francis Suarez (2022–23)
MilwaukeeDaniel Hoan (1934–35); Henry Maier (1971–72)
New York CityFiorello La Guardia (1935–45); Robert F. Wagner Jr. (1957–58)
Oklahoma CityMick Cornett (2016–17); David Holt (2025–present)
PittsburghDavid L. Lawrence (1950–52); Joseph M. Barr (1967–68)
San FranciscoElmer Robinson (1953–55); Joseph Alioto (1974–75)
SeattleNorm Rice (1995–96); Greg Nickels (2009)
TrentonArthur John Holland (1988–89); Douglas Palmer (2006–08)

Controversies

The organization has had some controversies. In Newark, New Jersey, one of its non-partisan presidential straw polls was determined to be contrary to a New Jersey Supreme Court ruling because the court had determined that it was improper for any municipality to test public opinion on an area outside of its jurisdiction.

In 2002, protests by about 3,000 people against corporate financing of the U.S. Conference of Mayors were met by arrests and the barricading of much of downtown Madison, Wisconsin, by then mayor Sue Bauman.

Also, at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, striking Boston Police Department officers decided to picket a Conference of Mayors meeting. 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, who was the invited speaker, decided to honor the picket line.

See also

Notes

Further reading

  • Farkas, Suzanne (1971). . New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-2550-3.
  • Fine, Sidney (1975). . University of Michigan Press. p. . ISBN 0-472-32949-9. Frank Murphy Conference of Mayors.
  • Flanagan, Richard M. "Roosevelt, Mayors and the New Deal Regime: The Origins of Intergovernmental Lobbying and Administration," Polity, 31:3 (Spring 1999), pp. 415–450.
  • Gunther, John Joseph (1990). . Federal City Relations in the United States: The Role of the Mayors in Federal Aid to Cities. University of Delaware Press. ISBN 0-87413-377-7.
  • Holli, Melvin G. (1999). . Pennsylvania State University Press. p. . ISBN 978-0-271-01877-5. Frank Murphy Conference of Mayors. as cited at
  • Norquist, John O. (1999). . Basic Books. ISBN 0-7382-0134-0.
  • Fry, Earl H. (1998). . Council on Foreign Relations. ISBN 0-8760-9222-9.
  • Barber, Benjamin (2013). . Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-16483-1.
  • Garcetti, Eric; Hachigian, Nina (February 21, 2020). . Foreign Affairs. Council on Foreign Relations.
  • Emanuel, Rahm (December 29, 2020). . Foreign Affairs. Council on Foreign Relations.

External links